From: Jeff Garzik <jgarzik@pobox.com>
To: Greg KH <greg@kroah.com>
Cc: Jeremy Katz <jeremy.katz@gmail.com>,
Stephen Rothwell <sfr@canb.auug.org.au>,
Andrew Morton <akpm@osdl.org>, Linus <torvalds@osdl.org>,
LKML <linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org>,
katzj@redhat.com
Subject: Re: [PATCH] PPC64 iSeries viodasd proc file
Date: Wed, 23 Jun 2004 20:38:10 -0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <40DA2272.8050106@pobox.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <20040623220303.GD6548@kroah.com>
Greg KH wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 23, 2004 at 05:15:54PM -0400, Jeremy Katz wrote:
>
>>For example, /sys/bus/ide/devices/* and then symlinks forever... lots
>>of readdir, readlink, etc makes probing far slower and more complex
>>than the simple /proc/ide/ide?/*/ that could be used before.
>
>
> Yes, ide never got completly moved over to sysfs like scsi did. We
> never had the time to do this work, sorry.
>
> But now your parsing should be easier with the one-value to one-file
> rule, right? And libsysfs should help out here with all of the symlinks
> and readdir, etc calls.
>
>
>>>>Also, things in sysfs aren't exactly stable enough to count on as a
>>>>dependable interface, but that's something the kernel has never
>>>>reliably exported to userspace.
>>>
>>>Why isn't sysfs stable enough? You can find any driver instantly. And
>>>any device bound to that driver in a stable and repeatable manner.
>>
>>Again, not sysfs itself. How information is exported via sysfs. I'm
>>not saying that things exported via /proc are always the picture of
>>stability here (cf the recent change from /proc/scsi/usb-storage-$host
>>to /proc/scsi/usb-storage/$host), but at the same time, things in
>>/proc have tended to settle down in the general case. This just isn't
>>true yet with sysfs and is only the sort of thing that can happen with
>>time.
>>
>>There are also other things; I guess consistency is a better word.
>>People like to say use /sys/block to show block devices, but that
>>shows a lot of "useless" block devices from the point of view of
>>trying to show disks.
>
>
> But all of those devices are block devices. You want a hardware
> picture, right? sysfs never said it would show you just that, but it
> makes it easier to determine.
>
> For this specific instance, just look for block devices that have a
> device symlink that points to a real device.
>
>
>>>So, give me specific examples, or stop ranting for no reason.
>>
>>And to be more constructive (after a discussion with Jeff this
>>afternoon which is when I realized the reply didn't go out), what
>>would be _very_ useful to have from a "probing disks" perspective
>>would be a way to enumerate easily and simply from within sysfs the
>>disks that are associated with a specific controller.
>
>
> Hm, I think libsysfs can give you this, if you ask for the block devices
> that are associated with each individual device associated with a
> driver.
>
> The whole "what driver controls what devices" is not a simple one to one
> mapping all the time, with drivers that work on multiple types of
> busses, and drivers that control devices that contain multiple class
> devices, etc. It's not a simple thing to solve, sorry.
SET_BLKDEV_DRIVER(), SET_NETDEV_DRIVER(), ...
We need a struct driver just like we have a struct device.
Then binding registered interfaces, of any type, to the driver.
> But what you can use is the MODULE_DEVICE_TABLE() information in the
> modules to try to help you out here. That details a mapping of what
> kind of devices that specific driver supports.
No, it details what devices a driver supports, not what _type_ of
devices the driver supports.
>>Note: this should not mean that we then go and remove currently
>>existing stuff in /proc. Deprecate it and then it can go away in time
>>as people switch. Having to have a flag day is very painful. It's
>>far easier to deprecate in one stable series with a new interface
>>available and then start removing the old ones as things start to
>>switch over. If it really is an improvement, then getting people to
>>change won't be difficult.
>
>
> I agree, I don't think that many things have disappeared from /proc just
> yet, right? You should just have more information than what you
> previously did, right? Or did scsi drop their /proc support fully?
Concrete example: modprobe sx8. Now, what block devices did it detect?
Jeff
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2004-06-24 0:38 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2004-06-18 6:54 [PATCH] PPC64 iSeries viodasd proc file Stephen Rothwell
2004-06-18 15:09 ` Jeff Garzik
2004-06-18 15:17 ` Christoph Hellwig
2004-06-20 19:52 ` Jeremy
2004-06-20 21:11 ` Christoph Hellwig
2004-06-21 6:04 ` Greg KH
[not found] ` <cb5afee10406210914451dc6@mail.gmail.com>
2004-06-23 21:15 ` Jeremy Katz
2004-06-23 21:45 ` Jeff Garzik
2004-06-23 22:03 ` Greg KH
2004-06-24 0:38 ` Jeff Garzik [this message]
2004-06-24 20:59 ` Greg KH
2004-06-24 21:25 ` Jeff Garzik
-- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2004-06-23 23:54 Stephen Rothwell
2004-06-23 23:55 ` Greg KH
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